The Life of Walter Scott

by J. A. Sutherland

Published 2 January 1995
Modern biography can be said to have begun with John Gibson Lockhart's "Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Bart" in 1838. But Scott - the 'Great Unknown' - has always presented challenges to the biographer. Layers of myth (much of it manufactured by the faithful son-in-law Lockhart) continues to protect him from posterity. There is also the sheer size of Scott's achievements as poet, novelist, man of letters, and self-made Laird of Abbotsford. The two standard lives - Lockhart's, and Edgar Johnson's published in 1970 - run to some three-quarters of a million words apiece. Finally, there has been the precipitate slump in Scott's general popularity: he is now the great unread. John Sutherland's critical biography attempts to penetrate into the darker areas of Scott's life in a sceptical spirit, bringing the massive oeuvre and the chronicle of the life into manageable and readable proportions. Sutherland justifies Scott as a writer to be read and known today as much as in his heyday in the 19th century. His important new interpretation of Scott is accompanied by appended summaries of all the major literary works and a comprehensive chronology of Scott's life and writing.